However, for all the gloom of his works, Andreyev is not a pessimist.
Under one of his pictures he has written: 'Though it destroys
individuals, the truth saves mankind.' The misery in the world may be
ever so great; the problems that force themselves upon man"s mind may
seem unanswerable; the happenings in the external world may fill his
soul with utter darkness, so that he despairs of finding any meaning,
any justification in life. And yet, though his reason deny it, his
soul tells him: 'The truth saves mankind.' After all, _Man_ is not a
failure. For though misfortunes crowd upon him, he remains intact in
soul, unbroken in spirit. He carries off the victory because he does
not surrender. He dies as a superman, big in his defiance of destiny.
This must be the meaning Andreyev attached to _Man"s_ life. We find
an interpretation of it, as it were, in 'Anathema,' in which _Someone_
sums up the fate of _David_--who lived an even sadder life than _Man_
and died a more horrible death--in these words: 'David has achieved
immortality, and he _lives immortal_ in the deathlessness of fire.
David has achieved immortality, and he _lives immortal_ in the
deathlessness of light which is life.'
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